scrutable

From Latin scrutari (to examine), from scruta (trash), which also gave
us scrutiny, scrutator, and
scrutate. Earliest documented
use: 1604.

USAGE:

“In fact, that’s the great irony of the court’s decision: By ruling that
Google had to alter its ‘memories’ for some, it essentially ruled that
it should become less scrutable and less transparent for others.”
Caitlin Dewey; Europe’s Highest Court Says People Have ‘the Right to Be
Forgotten’; The Washington Post; May 13, 2014.

A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:

The Panama Canal was dug with a microscope. -Ronald Ross, doctor and Nobel
Prize laureate (13 May 1857-1932) [alluding to the research done to get rid
of the mosquito (details)]